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Wednesday, 17 July 2013

Bell Tents to Bees

One of the reasons we have a campsite is because we love meeting different people and sharing their stories and campfire tales and adventures. June and July have been no different. So, thanks to everyone who has visited us so far this year. Worth a special mention were a couple starting a 3 month cycle ride from Penzance to Scotland, we were their first overnight stop and we felt very honoured - caught me mid flow cleaning the compost loo, with the ponies still mowing the campsite paddock! - but I quickly came to my senses and ushered the ponies out, abandoned the cleaning temporarily and showed them round.  Safe cycling onwards!
And a big thank-you to our lovely camping family from Ireland who fed us inspirational ideas from their family-sized bell tent, about how to pretty up the chain link fence. Haven't worked out how to take a picture yet that does it justice, but the fence now has solar butterfly and star lights along it and four sets of clothes lines for drying towels and wet suits etc with "ditsy" pegs festooned along the washing-lines.
Our ethos for having a small campsite is that we have a small but "perfect piece of cornwall" that we are very happy to share with people who are looking for a place to camp and looking for somewhere simplistic, that holds onto the basic principles of camping and "getting away from the city" whilst providing some of the niceties, like a hot shower (ours has a leafy canopy) and a comfy changing-room with mirrors to sort your hair and beard and a loo you don't mind using. We like to think ashfarm has an ambiance about it that lends itself to a variety of campers, couples, families and singles alike, but bottom principle is it is a place where we as a family would also like to camp. We do not have a shop or pub or games room on site and there is no electricity, but our campfires can be vibrant and friendly and full of chatter and laughter and campers can make the evenings as long, or as short as they like. Even when the weather is hot and sunny and there is no need for a fire, the firepit with its tree-trunk benches can be a central space to share each others company.  There are reclaimed bricks too, for use either in the fire or as wineglass or beer bottle coasters. A contingency of australian driven camper vans recently shamed us, by not only cooking a delicious casserole over the campfire, using a cast iron pot and the bricks to enclose the fire, but then griddled pancakes on the skillet lid in the morning. Come back again!
Regular use of the firepit has caused us a bit of a hiccough, that being that we may run out of wood! So to ensure that there is a plentiful supply for the rest of the camping season we have had to chop and bag up wood at the cost of £3 per bag, rather than leaving logs in a pile as a freeforall. Kindlers and collectable sticks are free and most people cheat slightly by bringing a firelighter - very acceptable play - so campfires are available but with a sustainable supply of wood.

We have had a lot of 'firsts' this month. Thanks to our first "engagement party" campers, who shared their company with us and were very kind about our site and facilities. We loved having you and were pleased the campsite could join in your celebratations and make your get together special. (If you have any photos you want to share on our blog please email them to me.) Congratulations to the couple in question! Your pending booking and an earlier visitor book entry had spurred us on to hang a curtain in the changing-room to give the people a little more privacy whilst they changed, since the frosted glass wasn't fullproof. We think it looks perfect.
We also had our first Harley Davidson on the site and I am hoping to be able to add a picture of the said fabuloso machine in due course. What a lovely sound as it purred up the driveway!
Had our first tent camping all by itself too. A family stayed for 3 nights and then simply left their tent for a further 3 nights, all on its lonesome. We have now taken it down and put it in storage until the family remember they have left something behind! We are now on day 6, poor lonely tent!

We don't mind if your tent is on site alone, whilst you gamble off elsewhere for a night, so long as we know. Tents generally need moving after 4/7 days so the grass underneath does not spoil and we think it reasonable to levy a 'tentcare' cost, should you not be sleeping-over in it, equivalent to one adult tariff for each night it is here alone.
The fields behind the site are now tall with barley and look a picture. For those who are inquisitive and like strolling around hedgerows, there is a rough stile in one corner of the wooded glade that leads into the field beyond and if you follow the hedgeside down, you join a footpath, which takes you left and across fields, down a single-track lane and back up through the woods, returning you to the church and back across the fields to us. It's a lovely 40 minute evening's walk.
The barley may not yet be ready for harvesting but the farmers locally have been hard at work making hay and we have had our winter's supply for the horses delivered. I love the smell of new hay, "'handsome" they might say here! The farm cats also think it is handsome and have immediately claimed it as their own and made themselves comfortable in it.
We have been treated to another beastie making themselves at home with us too, although their sojourn with us lasted only a couple of days. Bees! Our Harley Davidson camper mentioned to us he had seen a huge swarm of bees buzzing over the campsite and low and behold the very next day the dogs came across a selection of bees starting to make a hive in one of the old water connection grates. The pup almost got her nose stung as she investigated where the buzzing was coming from and the collie managed to get a bee stuck in his fur coat which drove him to destraction until I could find it and flick it out. It did feel a bit of a "gift" having them choose our glade to make a hive, but I was also quite relieved they decided we weren't ideal for making honey and travelled on to find a new home.
For now, we have a couple of days with only one camping visitor, so he has kindly decanted his tent into the glade and we have opened the gate to the ponies, for them to mow the campsite paddock, before our next lot of guests arrive. Summer camping in the sunshine.....luvverly!



Monday, 1 July 2013

Golowan

Mazey Day last saturday. (http://golowan.org)


I love Golowan and the processions, the carnival effigies, the colours and noise, the dancing, the beat of all the music, especially the Samba Band, the stalls and the Mazey special offers in the shops, fab! Came home with yummy olives, arty cards and cushions and a blanket for the Old Water Shed.

 Am really happy with this space. It has been transformed from the concrete block shell that it was when we took over as custodians of the land - no door or window left in the structure and with ivy hanging so far over the doorway you had to duck to enter - into a very pretty and comfortable changing-room, with mirrors, a corner-bench (now with pretty cushions) a daisy-glass window and glazed door. Chuffed!


Although spoilt by the continuous sunny days at the beginning of June we have had some wet days since, but with some sunny spells to remind us summer is here! Our campers, seem to have managed to dodge most of the showers though, sleeping through the misty nights and making the most of the scenic walks, coastal paths and taking time to investigate the bookshops and art galleries on the days that were a bit "iffy" weather wise. And we have been treated to a huge moon for the last few days. Big bonus of no electricity at the campsite is that on clear nights, the stars and moon can be seen at their best.


Our new copper black hens have just started laying, incredibly dark brown eggs. Unfortunately the chickens no longer roam the wooded glade, we have had to protect them from Mr Reynard with a 7ft high fenced pen, adjacent to our campsite paddock. Not so picture-perfect to look at, but at least they are safe. And campers can still hear them clucking and chatting away with the geese and 'congratulating' themselves after laying their eggs.


And the puppy, Rowan, is growing and learning to be obediant, although her razor sharp teeth have turned my son's hoodies and T-shirts into cotton colanders! But a puppy always raises the "aahh" response with anybody doggy orientated who camps with us (don't worry though, for those not doggy orientated we keep her on a lead and out the way) and for those visitors who camped with us last year and loved our Large Black pigs,  I am afraid she is the nearest we are getting to a "black piglet" this summer on the farm!


Thursday, 6 June 2013

A fantastic start to the 2013 season

Well the campsite is open and what a fantastic first week. The weather has been superb.  We have had seven continuous days of blue skies, sunshine and warmth, allowing for evening meals al fresco, sunny days on the beach and exploring St Michael's Mount. The first tents have arrived and we have been busy with our own "home-grown" family testing out our facilities - look out for their review, to see what they think.






A deadline always works well for us, so it was all-steam -ahead in the last few weeks to make up for lost time. The winter weather delayed our plans, with it being too wet to get the the new water pipe put into the wooded glade and resite and improve the shower, but it is all done now and the end result we are rather proud of.

We now have our posh compost toilet and the hot outdoor shower adjacent to each other.  There is a second mains water tap and sink, with one in the campsite padddock and one by the shower. And the Old Water Shed has morphed into a family sized changing-room. It does still need tiles on the floor and some more furniture, but it is very functional as it is and lovely to be able to shower under a leafy canopy and then step into a warm room to dry and dress.
There is new grass seed spread over the reclaimed areas and we look forward to this 'greening' up as the summer progresses. To protect these areas a little, a new gravel path guides you from our washing and changing facililities back into the campsite paddock.
There is a new gate, so you can walk between the campsite paddock and the wooded glade more easily. The picnic area is still there with a view of the Mount over the village rooftops and church tower (that view is captured in an earlier blog).  And ofcourse the campsite paddock itself, which is much as it was last year, minus the pigs, with their pig-pen now reclaimed and growing new grass.
We have had our first barbeques and camp fires...forgot the marshmallows though!
And our Beach Fun Run was also a great success, with 42 children running their hearts out and collection their medals on the beach at Marazion.
So, we are all set for a summer season and ready to meet and great our campers, with lots more blogs to come.

Friday, 17 May 2013

Marazion Beach Fun Run coincides with campsite opening June 1st

As if there isn't enough to do to make ready and ensure we are open for camping from June 1st I have been organising a beach fun run as coordinator for Marazion school with Hayle Runners.
A year ago, fairly much to the day, hundreds of us watched as the olympic torch came down onto the beach at Marazion. It was a beautiful day, the backdrop was pretty much perfect and a Fun Run was arranged on the back of the olympic event. The run was open, but it was the children who stole the event, from tiny tots with their parents in-tow to some serious racing juniors, the event was a tremendous success and it was wonderful to see so many families being sporty and having fun.
Why waste that success I thought!
So, on June 1st we are hosting another Fun Run, this time aimed at the under 15 year old children, who stole the show last year and any of their accompanying adults. It will be half-term week, so I am sure the children will be bored by that last saturday and their parents will want to "exercise" them! The tide is right for a 4pm start and if the weather is kind perhaps families can stay and barbeque after on the beach following the races. The event is being sponsored by The Godolphin Arms this year and supported by Marazion Town Council. There are entry forms which can be collected from Marazion School or downloaded from 
http://www.haylerunners.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/Marazion-Beach-Fun-Run-entry-form-2013.pdf 
Entry fee is £2 and all finishers will get a medal. There are also prizes for the first 3 girls and boys in each race. And a school plaque for the first Marazion schoolchild across the finish line in the long race of 1.5 miles.
Children can choose from a short race of 0.8 miles from in front of the Godolphin Arms to the Red River and back or a long race of 1.5 miles running two laps of the same course. Posters can be downloaded from
http://www.haylerunners.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/Marazion-Beach-Fun-Run-race-poster-2013.pdf

The campsite opens June 1st and the new shower and changing -room in the old water shed are almost finished. Photos and a blog about them, to follow!  Meanwhile, here's a picture of our new puppy, Rowan, lending a hand putting in a new gateway from the campsite paddock into the wooded glade
and testing out the sink and plug in the campsite paddock!

Monday, 22 April 2013

Slight technical hitch but a what a "backdrop" - no pun intended

Well there was a slight technical hitch on St Patrick's Day when the big brown horse and I had an accident resulting in a trip in our great Cornwall Air Ambulance (a little over excitement turned into a rear and backwards we both went with me underneath.....ouch!)  Thankfully, after 3 weeks mostly in bed, followed by a period of 'hobbling', I am now walking almost normally, have started swimming as therapy and am on the mend.  And the horse, apart from some tight hamstrings, which have been treated by an equine sports therapist, appears unhurt (but as friends have said "he had the softer landing, he landed on you!"). Not quite ready to climb back up yet though!  The cinamatographer in the family managed, despite all the trauma and drama to take both photos and a video with the mobile phone, which illustrates the fantastic "backdrop" of St Michael's Mount.
What I have found, during this period of restricted mobility, is that the seasons have changed and we have definately moved into spring. Rugs have come off the horses .....

and the primroses and daffodils are all coming up in the fields and paddocks and our wooded glade, which has allowed for a vase of golden sunshine in the cottage.

And there are always silver linings in every grey cloud. Not being able to physically do what I usually do, has allowed me instead to indulge in a little light reading and I have discovered some splendid books, A Cat, a Hat and a Piece of String, The Prisoner of Heaven, Foal's Bread, The Man who Forgot his Wife,  The Loveliest Chocolate Shop in Paris and the most recent read, Falling in Honey - which couldn't fail to put one in the right mood for summer - I even managed to finish it in a sunny spot in the garden whilst eating breakfast and having a coffee. What could be better!

This last weekend, as well as moving the hot water shower out of the campsite paddock, to be replaced by a cold water shower beside the tap and sink......but do not fear campers the hot water shower will still be available, but is to be repositioned in the wooded glade alongside a second tap and sink. We also managed to get down to the beach at Hayle, in front of the Surf Lifesaving Club, for the youngest son to have a paddle board. Admittedly he wore a winter rash vest and a winter wetsuit, boots and hat, but he informs me "it wasn't even cold mum!"  It was a glorious, mild and sunny april day.

And what better way to finish a perfect day, but with the first barbeque of the year and a sunset over St Ives.............purrfect! Putting us all in a very optimistic mood for the summer to come...........

 P.S. also got time to develop a new look blog, hope you like it.



 

Friday, 15 March 2013

Preparing for the camping season 2013

Spring is definately on its way and the weather has allowed for a couple of days of clearing and reclaiming in the campsite paddock, where the pigs used to be. Which has resulted in a blackthorn "Root Ent" - which will need to dry in our lovely cornish sun, before bonfiring -


- but reclaimed is a lovely new area for camping and playing games on. And there's a nice drop of cornish rain today, after some warm sun yesturday, to help the grass seed along.


Wednesday, 20 February 2013

2013 Camping Season

Well, what a wet winter!  Spring is now on its way, although it is not yet dry enough for us to get the last of the clearing and reclaiming completed in the paddock and wooded area, so we have not been able to open for half-term camping and it is doubtful for Easter - but I will keep the blog updated and please do email us.
We will be open for the summer June - October 2013 though with room for camper vans in the paddock and tents in the wooded area.